"In U.S. historiography, as in American popular culture, historians have tended to over-emphasize the role of the individual in history. Great men are identified as founders and leaders; they become the virtual representatives of the movement: William Lloyd Garrison for abolition, Eugene Debs for the socialist movement, Martin Luther King Jr. for the civil rights movement. In fact, no mass movement of any significance is carried forward by and dependent upon one leader, or one symbol. There are always leaders of subgroups, of local and regional organizations, competing leaders representing differing viewpoints, and, of course, the ground troops of anonymous activists. And, as can be shown in each of the above cases, emphasis on the "great man" omits women, minorities, many of the actual agents of social change. In so doing it gives a partial, an erroneous picture of how social change was actually achieved in the past and thereby fosters apathy and confusion about how social change can be made in the present. As was to be expected, the same distorted historiography would be applied to the nineteenth-century woman suffrage movement. By elevating Stanton and Anthony to the great and unique leaders of the movement; by omitting Lucy Stone and most of the New England activists; by down-playing the role of radicals like Frances Wright, Ernestine Rose, and labor movement activists; and by disregarding the parallel struggles of African American women for suffrage and equal rights the movement's breadth and depth were lost and the complexities of its tactics were obscured."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
HumanistsWomen academics from the United StatesFeminists from the United StatesMarxists from the United StatesWomen academics from Austria
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Living With History / Making Social Change (2009)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Gerda_Lerner
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Gerda Lerner
Gerda Lerner (30 April 1920 – 2 January 2013) was an Austrian-born American feminist, historian, author, and advocate of Women's History.
40 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Gerda Lerner →
Related Quotes
"Men have been writing the history of the world from their point of view, and according to their sets of values, for o…"
"Patriarchy has not only invented itself and usurped a central place, but it has usurped intellectually, a kind of leg…"
"I have documented 700 years of feminist bible criticism prior to 1870, and every woman who engaged in that feminist b…"
"I believe myself that appointing women with their history is the single most important thing we can do to raise femin…"
"In the final analysis, after a lifetime spent as a writer and as a historian, I must take a stand in my own right. Hi…"
"Among equals there is no category of "Otherness." The act of categorizing another implies oppression."
"I have sometimes been asked, "How has your being Jewish influenced your work in Women's History?" The simplest way I …"
"What I learned from that comfortable, sheltered life I led in a country in which Catholicism was the state religion a…"
"Assimilated Jews did not wish to dwell on the actuality of European Jewish history. There were biblical times and the…"
"We are living at a very wonderful moment. A moment that I believe is more important than a renaissance, a moment that…"